The debate in the House on language to implement the budget focused early Tuesday morning on what the state is doing to attract businesses.

The bill, which passed the House 78-65 around 1 a.m. Tuesday and the Senate 19-17 Monday night, includes $1.3 billion in tax hikes over two years, even though it canceled about $500 million in previously approved tax hikes. The Democrat-controlled legislature agreed with Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s proposal to maintain the computer processing tax at 1 percent and delayed unitary reporting for multi-state companies to January 2016.

The business community opposed those two taxes and nine days after the General Assembly approved that budget, Malloy asked them to change it, which they did with a nearly 700-page bill.

The budget also cuts spending to social services by $25 million over the biennium, reduces by $13 million the money available for state employee raises, and reduces the public campaign finance account by $7.8 million. Lawmakers opted not to give Malloy the power to make unilateral spending cuts.

Rep. Chris Davis, R-East Windsor, said the Democratic majority is not fooling anyone with this budget.

“We still have over a $1 billion in tax increases,” Davis said. “Tax increases we were promised a few short months ago would not exist … because a deficit would not exist.”

Davis said the tax increases in the budget are not just on businesses—they’re on every taxpayer in Connecticut that owns property or buys clothing and footwear.